Quall: “108 degrees, and you are here to tell the story.”
Jones: “What was your main reason for volunteering for these tests?”
Johnson: “I served in the U. S. Army during the First World War, and here, by going through with these tests, I helped some of my buddies in the war just ended.”
Quall: “Thanks, Johnson. Now, here is Charles Eirtz, number so and so.”
Eirtz: “My brother was killed in the crossing of the Saar [Sarre] River; that made up my mind for me; we weren’t being shot at here; it was the least we could do.”
Quall: “And here is George Storm; George Storm, number so and so.”
Storm: “Two of my brothers in the service caught malaria. If I can help the Army, I can help my brothers.”
Quall: “Here is a man who is one of the many inmate nurses helping out in the war. What is your name?”
Leopold: “Nathan Leopold, number so and so. I was a malaria volunteer, and now I am acting as a nurse.”
Quall: “How do most of the patients react under these tests?”